YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Cultural Impact of Television
Essays 391 - 420
in obscure settings where television was nonexistent. Then, another group with television was compared and contrasted to the origi...
In five pages this paper discusses the adverse societal effects of sexuality that is featured in prime time television with a prop...
In three pages the aggressive, superiority, and cognitive humor theories are applied to this ABC television sitcom. There is one ...
In fourteen pages the ways in which the introduction of television cameras into the courtroom have affected courtroom proceedings ...
was basically antiwar in its theme. FIRST SEASON The film was not much of a success, but the concept for the film intrigued those...
People identify, after all, with people that are similar to them. Ebonics has the potential, therefore, to serve as a common link...
female college students also responded that the online experience is a more comfortable way to interact with others. In fact, the...
timely manner. Big Box Discounters have done neither in this case, and I have just about run out of patience. As a result, I am ...
not something that sprung up in the 1990s or 1980s. Yes, it is a 1950s phenomenon ("Film History of the 1950s"). McDonalds was fra...
first introduced to America in the episode entitled "Meet the Bunkers" that CBS originally aired on Tuesday, January 12, 1971 at 9...
concerning race, gender and social strata. Genre seems to be most important of tall and determines the basic hierarchical structur...
the ten greatest mathematicians of the twentieth century, when Farnsworth died he held 300 U.S. and foreign patents. This articl...
factor in the onset of childhood obesity. Dennison, Erb, and Jenkins (2002) report that children spend a larger portion of their ...
which is at the "heart of this piece, cannot stand such a strong dose of reality" (Brode 98). There is artificiality in abundanc...
In three pages cable television is discussed in a consideration of its history that also includes various issues of relevance incl...
In twelve pages this research paper examines television viewing habits and why people watch what they do with various communicatio...
This was further supported by research conducted by the American Academy of Pediatrics, which concluded that, "Heavy exposure to t...
universities. The conclusion is that violence on TV is more prevalent than most had imagined. Nearly 2,700 programs were analyze...
In seven pages this essay condemns the increasing violence being shown on television and provides research study evidence regardin...
According to that particular definition, finding a body in a pool of blood would count while Kramer bumping into a door on the Sei...
of sexual activity, particularly among adolescents. Whos Responsibility? When the discussion revolves around children, th...
In ten pages this paper discusses changing attitudes between the 1960s and 1990s regarding the portrayal of sex by the mass media ...
do. "With Ozzie and Harriet, everyone felt guilty," said Barbara Cadow, a psychologist at U.S.C. School of Medicine. "With these...
In fourteen pages this paper discusses TV sitcoms during this time period and how they portrayed the American family with past and...
once mentioning the word "pregnant" in the script. This changed to some extent in the 1960s, but not as much as one might have ex...
In ten pages various examples of Saturday morning children's cartoon television and the commercials that advertised on them are th...
In eleven pages this report discusses how pay per view television is threatening the 'free' broadcasting of events such as major l...
In five pages these American television figures are contrasted and compared in terms of the premature deaths of their sons which l...
In five pages the life and work of this pioneering television journalist are discussed in terms of childhood, family, and status a...
children. Such television programs are important in that they "talk to kids" instead of talking down to them. There are many tha...